Bangkok Post

KENYA’S ABOUT-FACE: FEAR FOR DEMOCRACY AS DISSENT IS MUZZLED

Shuttering of TV stations has locals decrying a crackdown that exceeds even the heavy-handed strategies of authoritar­ian ex-ruler Daniel Arap Moi

- By Jina Moore

The most widely watched television stations in Kenya are shuttered, and the government has defied a court order to return them to the air. Opposition politician­s are under arrest, and journalist­s have also been threatened with jail. And the government has officially designated some of its opponents “an organised criminal group.”

“This is a new crisis for democracy,” said Willy Mutunga, a former chief justice of the Kenyan Supreme Court, who left the bench in 2016. “Defying a court order is subverting the rule of law.”

The events in Kenya over the past week are a stunning about-face in a country praised mere months ago as a shining example of democracy, when the Supreme Court overturned a presidenti­al election, and the winner, Uhuru Kenyatta, agreed to abide by the ruling. That case was hailed as a powerful display of judicial independen­ce and a win for the rule of law.

But now many Kenyans fear their country is sliding away from democracy. The coming days, they say, may be critical in determinin­g what direction the country will take.

“Kenya hasn’t seen anything like this before — this is unheard-of,” said Ahmednasir Abdullahi, who represente­d Mr Kenyatta before the Supreme Court last year in several election cases. “When there is a court order you don’t obey, you look like a rogue state.”

The US government said in a statement last week that it was “deeply concerned” about the interferen­ce with the media, and the UN Office of the High Commission­er for Human Rights called on the government to “respect and implement” the court order to end the blackout.

In Kenya, some are now likening Kenyatta to Daniel Arap Moi, the authoritar­ian president who ruled the country for 24 years, before finally leaving office in 2002. Mr Moi outlawed political parties, banned many foreign and local newspapers and magazines, and detained and tortured those designated as political opponents, including writers and intellectu­als.

But shutting down broadcast stations “never happened, even under Moi”, said George Kegoro, executive director of the Kenya Human Rights Commission, a nongovernm­ental group that is a leading human-rights authority in the country.

The current tensions have their roots in last year’s presidenti­al election, when Raila Odinga, Kenyatta’s longtime political rival, challenged his loss to the president. The Supreme Court ordered a new election, but Mr Odinga withdrew before the second vote, saying the process remained unfair.

When Mr Odinga’s supporters boycotted the polls, they handed Kenyatta an easy victory. Mr Odinga refused to concede defeat and threatened to take a parallel “oath” as “the people’s president”.

The government said it would regard the action as treason, and Western diplomats pleaded with Mr Odinga to cancel the ceremony. But he pushed forward with the “oath,” and the US government, in a formal statement, stopped just short of denouncing the move as unconstitu­tional.

Mr Kenyatta summoned media owners last week and warned them not to cover the Odinga event at Uhuru Park, in downtown Nairobi. But on Tuesday morning, Kenya’s biggest stations broadcast live from the park before Mr Odinga’s arrival.

Government officials then disconnect­ed them. Odinga did take the oath that day.

On Wednesday, three journalist­s at NTV slept in the newsroom after being tipped off by police sources that officers were stationed around the building, waiting to arrest them. They spent Thursday night in a safe house, and on Friday, a court granted them anticipato­ry bail, effectivel­y protecting them from arrest. So far, they have not been charged with any crime.

A court in Nairobi on Thursday ordered the government to restore the stations “with immediate effect”. But by early Monday morning, it had still not complied.

The government’s aggressive stance toward the media and the political opposition may have lent legitimacy to what many observers had dismissed as political theatre by Mr Odinga.

“The whole world was condemning Raila Odinga for what he had done,” said Abdullahi, the president’s onetime lawyer. “The government had the moral high ground. For me, this is the government shooting itself in the foot.”

But the television blackout is universall­y agreed to be the most dramatic showdown between the government and the press in the history of Kenya’s young democracy. The shuttered stations reach nearly 70% of Kenyan viewers, according to the latest figures from GeoPoll, a survey firm.

None but the wealthiest Kenyans can watch television online, where the stations continue to broadcast.

The government is discussing reopening the stations with the media outlets, conditioni­ng a return to the air on their agreement to coverage restrictio­ns, according to an official with knowledge of the confidenti­al conversati­ons. The media outlets deny any negotiatio­ns.

If government officials continue to disregard the order to turn the stations back on, the court could cite them for contempt, or even order them jailed, lawyers say. If those orders are also ignored, that would be a clear sign of a weakened judiciary — and a teetering democracy.

But a bigger concern now is whether the government takes action against Mr Odinga. An arrest, many fear, might be greeted by widespread public resistance and set off violence — especially since the crackdown seems to have polarized ordinary Kenyans.

“We are hurting as a country,” said Job Ogutu, a mechanic who works in Nairobi. “The gains we made are no more. The government is supposed to be the custodian of all laws but its using these same laws to hurt and oppress its people.”

 ??  ?? POPULAR UPRISING: Supporters of opposition leader Raila Odinga gather for his mock swearing-in ceremony at Uhuru Park in Nairobi on Tuesday.
POPULAR UPRISING: Supporters of opposition leader Raila Odinga gather for his mock swearing-in ceremony at Uhuru Park in Nairobi on Tuesday.
 ??  ?? BLACKOUT: A Kenyan man sits in front of black screens showing a ‘No Signal’ message in a Nairobi dealership.
BLACKOUT: A Kenyan man sits in front of black screens showing a ‘No Signal’ message in a Nairobi dealership.
 ??  ?? PRESSING ON: Station staff work online after the Kenyan government disconnect­ed three major television channels.
PRESSING ON: Station staff work online after the Kenyan government disconnect­ed three major television channels.

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